Marcum Zachary A, Hanlon Joseph T, Murray Michael D
School of Pharmacy, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Schools of Medicine (Geriatrics), Pharmacy, and Public Health, University of Pittsburgh, 3471 Fifth Avenue, Suite #500, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Drugs Aging. 2017 Mar;34(3):191-201. doi: 10.1007/s40266-016-0433-7.
Poor medication adherence is a major public health problem in older adults often resulting in negative health outcomes.
The objective of this review was to provide an updated summary of evidence from randomized controlled studies to determine whether interventions aimed at improving medication adherence also improve the health outcomes of older adults residing in community-based settings.
Articles that assessed medication adherence interventions and related health outcomes in elderly individuals were identified through searches of MEDLINE (1970-June 2016), the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (through to June 2016), and Google Scholar. Across the 12 included studies, interventions were grouped into three main categories: behavioral/educational (n = 3), pharmacist-led (n = 7), and reminder/simplification (n = 2).
Among the behavioral/educational intervention studies, two showed improvements in both adherence and related health outcomes, whereas one found no changes in adherence or health outcomes. Among the pharmacist-led studies, three showed improvements in both adherence and related health outcomes, while three reported no changes in adherence or health outcomes. One found an improvement in adherence but not health outcomes. Among the reminder/simplification studies, both studies reported improvements in adherence without a significant impact on related health outcomes.
This evidence-based review of medication adherence interventions in older adults revealed promising strategies in the larger context of a largely mixed body of literature. Future patient-centered and multidisciplinary interventions should be developed and tested using evidence-based principles to improve medication adherence and health outcomes in older adults.
用药依从性差是老年人面临的一个主要公共卫生问题,常导致不良健康后果。
本综述的目的是提供随机对照研究证据的最新总结,以确定旨在提高用药依从性的干预措施是否也能改善居住在社区环境中的老年人的健康结局。
通过检索MEDLINE(1970年至2016年6月)、Cochrane系统评价数据库(截至2016年6月)和谷歌学术,识别评估老年人用药依从性干预措施及相关健康结局的文章。在纳入的12项研究中,干预措施分为三大类:行为/教育类(n = 3)、药剂师主导类(n = 7)和提醒/简化类(n = 2)。
在行为/教育干预研究中,两项研究显示依从性和相关健康结局均有改善,而一项研究发现依从性和健康结局均无变化。在药剂师主导的研究中,三项研究显示依从性和相关健康结局均有改善,三项研究报告依从性和健康结局无变化。一项研究发现依从性有所改善,但健康结局未改善。在提醒/简化研究中,两项研究均报告依从性有所改善,但对相关健康结局无显著影响。
这项基于证据的老年人用药依从性干预措施综述在大量参差不齐的文献中揭示了一些有前景的策略。未来应以患者为中心,采用循证原则开发和测试多学科干预措施,以提高老年人的用药依从性和健康结局。